What’s the right thing to do if your crowdfunding platform guarantees to detect “any and all” cases of fraud, but then is shown clear evidence by Pando of a near-$1m fraudulent campaign happening right now?

If you answered “suspend the fraudulent campaign,” you’re right.

If you answered “quietly delete the no fraud guarantee from our website,” you’re Indiegogo.

I’m not joking. Following a week of reporting by PandoDaily in which we exposed the junk science, corporate smoke and mirrors and flat lies behind Moscow-based Healbe’s Indiegogo campaign, Indiegogo finally took action yesterday. Not by suspending the campaign to protect its users, not by doing anything at all to ensure that thousands of people aren’t about to be swindled out of close to a million dollars... but by deleting the reference to their foolproof fraud detection from their support pages.

Indiegogo has a comprehensive fraud-prevention system to protect our users. All campaigns and contributions go through a fraud review, which allows us to catch any and all cases of fraud. If we find fraudulent contributions on your campaign, we may remove them from your campaign Funds and Fulfillment pages. We may also ask you for more information, if we determine your campaign to be a high fraud risk. Finally, all campaigns that raise money go through a final examination before any funds are disbursed.

Indiegogo has a comprehensive fraud-prevention system to protect our users. Campaigns and contributions that have been flagged by our fraud detection system go through a thorough review. If we find fraudulent contributions on your campaign, we may remove them from your campaign Funds and Fulfillment pages. We may also ask you for more information, if we determine your campaign to be a high fraud risk. In a final step, we perform an examination before funds are disbursed.

On Monday, backers were assured that Indiegogo’s fraud system was comprehensive and infallible -- and Pando was told that Healbe had gone through, and passed, those checks. Today, the most the company will say is that it has a fraud-prevention system, which may or may not apply to a particular campaign. Meanwhile, the company still refuses to share with us any details of how it actively cleared a Russian company to misrepresent itself as being based in San Francisco and bring in over $900,000 (and counting) for a product that science says can’t exist.

In my last update -- where Healbe’s founders explained that their innovation method was inspired by Russian science fiction, and released a ludicrous "demo" video -- I wrote that the Healbe story had gone from scam to farce. Today Indiegogo has made clear that they’d rather be complicit in that farce, and in a million dollar scam, than be forced to take responsibility for what happens on their platform.

We’ve reached out to the company to ask if they’ll at least be communicating the change in their anti-fraud guarantee to the thousands of users who have backed Healbe’s campaign on the basis of that promise. We’ll update this story as soon as we hear back.